The photo that UPS provided to prove that they delivered my package. I mean, sure, it’s my front porch, but they could have included the package.
Plot twist: OP ordered a porch
Submitted 8 months ago by Nusm@yall.theatl.social to mildlyinfuriating@lemmy.world
https://yall.theatl.social/pictrs/image/d5ccae36-7edd-4f7b-b49f-4d9b39c1b152.jpeg
The photo that UPS provided to prove that they delivered my package. I mean, sure, it’s my front porch, but they could have included the package.
Plot twist: OP ordered a porch
Sounds like an easy claim that they didn’t deliver the package.
Yup. It is an official proof that the package wasn’t delivered.
In my experience they often do deliver the package but not to a location that necessarily anywhere near your front door, favorite locations include in a bush, any random property within about 30 m, in a bin, or just randomly in the middle of the street.
If anything, that proves that they didn’t deliver it lol
Looks about right.
For a while Google had the roadmaps to the property right but not Apple. Using your eyes it was easy. Following the app blindly, not so much.
Found a box at the back of the property clearly tossed over the back fence, no where even visible from the house. Compliments of UPS.
Btw if you have Apple Maps, it’s decently easy to submit an address correction, they usually update with corrections within a week or so. Google maps is also easy enough, but they seem to take a bit longer to correct.
The speed of Google Maps corrections seems to strongly depend on some internal reputation data they have from your previous submissions and the kind of submissions you make. The more you contribute accurate stuff, the faster your future contributions go through the system.
Unfortunately, I’ve never found a way to submit corrections to Apple Maps from a Linux system, so there continue to be a dozen or more places where I know Apple Maps is wrong but I can’t help them out with fixing it.
I’ve done customer support for delivery companies, although not UPS, and the caliber of the drivers is definitely something that is very variable. Sometimes I’m amazed they even have a license.
There are certain properties that they seem physically incapable of locating even though then doesn’t appear to be anything particularly interesting or art about the property and I can find it easily by googling it. There must be some kind of temporal anomaly that I’m unaware of. So anyway, that job sucked.
This is where I would deliver your package
IF I HAD ONE
Last one of these I had the guy was driving away and took the photo.
Based on the number of photos people post on Nextdoor of their package at a totally different house, I’m not sure why these companies bother. Maybe they could train drivers to actually use their brains to see if they’re at the right place first.
They’d need to allow drivers to take enough time to appropriately do the job, so that’s never going to happen.
When you have to make as many deliveries in an hour to require breaking the sound barrier during your shift, you don’t have time to check house numbers.
Accurate. I get pissy about my deliveries (FedEx is notoriously bad here) but the truth of the matter is that the drivers are way overworked. They time shit down to the minute but assume traffic is constantly as good as the best days. So yeah, they build in time for bathroom breaks and to get everything where it goes as long as no one on the road has wrecked, is driving slow, and there are no construction zones gumming up the works. Then they penalize the drivers if everything isn’t done. So you end up with shit thrown over the fence, boxes that look like they were run over, misdelivered packages, and pictures of the corner of a porch.
I’ve often thought that a good business would be a delivery company and your main gimmick is that you actually deliver the packages. I think they’ve missed out on an untapped market of actually doing the thing they claim to do.
Most of these package delivery companies hire people who would lose a battle of wits to their own reflection, pay them next to nothing, and give them 900 parcels to deliver in 45 minutes. Inevitably it leads to problems. My recommendation is that they don’t do any of that, and just hire more drivers. The increased business they would get by being reliable would offset the cost of having to hire more people.
I don’t disagree. Ultimately it’s the fault of companies who expect drivers to do way too much to do it well. Having them waste time on a picture is incredibly stupid when a lot of times all it does is prove the delivered to the wrong place. It feels like the kind of thing thought up by upper management with no idea what the actual day to day of the job is like.
So that’s where they put my invisible bench!
“MILDLY” infuriating? lol
Guy doubled as a porch thief? But it’s hilarious must been new at the job. Didn’t even know UPS did that thought only Amazon did?
I bet their phone was too slow and took the picture a half second after the driver hit the button, while they were turning away from the porch.
They all do it now (except USPS?)
It’s really hit and miss though, at least where I am. Amazon does it probably 75% of the time. UPS and FedEx are both maybe like 30% of the time. I don’t know if the shipper has to flag the package to have a picture taken or the drivers just don’t give a fuck most of the time.
USPS don’t take photos, but at least in my experience they have the best delivery drivers. My local mailman knows people’s names and there’s been several times where letters or packages had the wrong address (correct street name but a typo in the number) and I still got them. He circles the address and writes “address corrected by your mailman” on the label.
My proof was one time a picture of my entire apartment building
Did you actually get the package?
So like, am I the only one that sees it behind the top pillar in the shadow? That little jut out of the shadow on top is actually the corner of the box… no?
TransplantedSconie@lemm.ee 8 months ago
Ups driver here. UPS management and their infinite wisdom have decided to give us boards that are incapable of clearing the cache of information unless you completely restart the board. This results in the boards slowing down and eventually crashing, and until the inevitable crash, it slows down to the point where I can take a photo of the delivery, and it won’t register the photo until I’m turning back towards the truck.
I’ve taken photos of the sky, lawns, gardens, flowers, and streets, and often it immediately will register the Stop Complete.
I’m not saying you didn’t get the package stolen, just an explanation of what might have happened here.
dept@lemmy.sdf.org 8 months ago
yeah it looks like that’s the shadow of the package on the bottom left corner so it probably took the photo as the driver turned away.
possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip 8 months ago
You shouldn’t speak about your employer online
CoffeeJunkie@lemmy.world 8 months ago
…this is how people outside the industry learn what’s going on, possible explanations for it. 🤨 Otherwise everybody’s just perpetually in the dark.
Also, he didn’t say anything bad about UPS, just a bad part of bad software.
NoMoreBread@sopuli.xyz 8 months ago
Lmao why?
dan@upvote.au 8 months ago
Why? Lemmy is pseudonomous and they’re not using their real name so I doubt the employer would know who they are.
MisterFrog@lemmy.world 8 months ago
You shouldn’t lick the bottom of boots, ain’t healthy.
ilost7489@lemmy.ca 8 months ago
How DARE you EVER complain about work, wage slave.
Randomgal@lemmy.ca 8 months ago
Big corporations don’t need you to help them exploit their workers.
bdonvr@thelemmy.club 8 months ago
You absolutely, 100000% should. Just be careful, keep it semi-anonymous. I say this as someone who has been fired for talking about their employer online lmao.
zephr_c@lemm.ee 8 months ago
No, your employer doesn’t want people to learn what they’re really like, which is exactly why you should make it public.
MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca 8 months ago
*their
echodot@feddit.uk 8 months ago
Sure because they’re giving away trade secrets. Did anyone actually think that UPS were bastion of efficiency because I don’t think that was ever a public opinion.
Get your priorities straight
Goun@lemmy.ml 8 months ago
Lol I read this like an attack and was like wtf chill dude.
Maybe you’re a bit paranoid, but yeah, I’d be careful with naming my employer if I worked for a smaller company, for example? idk
ipkpjersi@lemmy.dbzer0.com 8 months ago
If it were a smaller company sure but for one as massive as UPS I think it’s perfectly safe lol
wathek@discuss.online 8 months ago
Maybe he means in a context with your real name visible?